Ecuador’s most notorious gang leader lived ‘like a king’ while locked up. His jailbreak shines a light on the country’s lawless prisons
With its four-piece bathroom
suite, queen-size bed and mini fridge, the untidy prison cell of the notorious
leader of the Los Choneros gang, José Adolfo Macías, could have been in a hotel
instead of one of Ecuador’s largest prison complexes.
This is “better than at home…
[he] lives like a king,” a soldier exclaims in the second of several videos
showing Macías’ room and personal grassy courtyard, filled with half a dozen of
his pet fighting roosters.
The videos, shared with CNN,
were taken in La Regional prison and filmed by members of the military last
year.
In another video shot inside
Macías’ prison cell, a colorful mural depicting the gang leader better known as
“Fito,” warns “silver or lead.”
The phrase, popularized by
Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar, offers the grim choice of taking a bribe or
being shot – a possible warning to prison staff.
The clips offer more evidence
to the stark reality that Ecuador’s prison system has turned into the
headquarters for criminal groups that have amassed foot soldiers and influence
across the country, experts say.
In less than a decade,
organized crime has turned the relatively peaceful country into one of the most
dangerous places in Latin America.
Prison massacres have become
more frequent in recent years, leading to the deaths of hundreds of people,
some of whom were found dismembered.
In the latest riots, more than
130 prison guards and administrative employees were kidnapped across several
prisons. They have since been released.
“The criminal groups have all
the control [of the prisons] – that’s why Fito had all those benefits in
prison: TV, internet, food, alcohol, women – everything he wants,” Jean-Paul Pinto, an Ecuadorian security expert who has previously advised Ecuador’s
police and intelligence agency, told CNN.
Experts speculate that those
freedoms the drug kingpin enjoyed while incarcerated are also why he was able
to escape La Regional prison – a jailbreak that captured the attention of the
world and kicked off a storm of violence across the country last month.
It was around a decade ago
when Ecuador started to lose control of its prisons, experts say. A series of
oversights by successive Ecuadorian leaders allowed for criminality to expand
throughout the prison system, according to Glaeldys González, an expert on
organized crime at the International Crisis Group.
These oversights included mass
prison transfers aimed at breaking up criminal groups - a move that backfired
and only helped gangs expand their footprint throughout the country, she added.
Mass incarceration policies
helped gangs recruit new members behind bars, while the 2017 demobilization of
Colombia’s powerful guerrilla force, FARC, allowed Ecuadorian gangs to fill the
void when it came to the trafficking of cocaine from Colombia to Ecuador’s
ports, analysts say.
With 30,000 gang members
estimated across the country, many incarcerated criminals have been able to use
influence outside the prison walls to control their jailers.
“Intimidation has been used
[by gang members to make prison staff carry out] illicit activity requested by
the criminals, who would threaten harm to family and loved ones if they
didn’t,” said Julio Cesar Ballesteros, who was formerly the deputy general
director of SNAI, and vice-minister of social rehabilitation, under former
President Lenín Moreno.
Ballesteros told CNN that
corruption was bound to happen because prison guards were underpaid, overworked
and dealing with terrible conditions, where overcrowding meant “there weren’t
enough guards for the number of prisoners.”
The chronic overcrowding of
Ecuador’s prisons has fueled the violence. Inmates have previously told CNN of
people having to sleep in corridors without mattresses, and according to data
from SNAI, the prisons were between 3,250 and 4,150 people over capacity last
year.
Ballesteros added that
organized criminal groups “controlled absolutely everything” in the
penitentiaries.
“The prisons are no longer
administered by the state, from within, the criminals took over…many prison
officials, even top officials, were subjected, either by blackmail or threats,
so they looked the other way and allowed the illicit activity.”
In one instance, an
investigation last year by Ecuador Attorney General Diana Salazar revealed a
high-profile incarcerated drug trafficker’s plan to pay off prison staff with
up to $3,000 in exchange for bringing in pigs for a “prisoners’ day” party.
Messages shared by Salazar’s
office show the trafficker boasting, “It’s like I am the director here,” in
messages to acquaintances outside the prison.
It’s part of a pattern across
the region, experts say.
“The prison system in Latin
America has long been the incubator, and training center, and headquarters for
some of the most powerful criminal syndicates in the Americas,” Jeremy
McDermott, co-founder of think tank InSight Crime, told CNN.
“And, so, it’s no surprise
that this is replicated in Ecuador.”
Macías is one of Ecuador’s most notorious gangsters and is the only founding member of Los Choneros believed to still be alive.
In 2011 he was sentenced “for a string of crimes,
including homicides and narcotics trafficking,” according to think tank Insight
Crime, but sprung out of jail in February 2013 before being recaptured months
later.
Little is known about his life
before crime, but the 44-year-old gained a reputation for being the gang’s
money laundering expert while incarcerated for over a decade.
Los Choneros and their main
rival, Los Lobos, are believed to be allied with Mexican drug cartels in a war
for dominance over Ecuador’s drug trade.
Los Lobos saw an opening amid
a violent power struggle in Los Choneros when Macías became its leader in 2020,
say experts.
The Los Choneros infighting
that year, as well as their turf war with Los Lobos, coincided with an
explosion of prison violence and Ecuador’s rising homicide rate – which made
Macías a household name in Ecuador.
More than 300 people died in
prisons in 2021, some of whom were beheaded in horrific massacres that saw
inmates armed with automatic weapons and even grenades. The bloodshed, and
rivalries, continue today, González said.
Beyond the prison walls,
economic insecurity in the country has either driven many Ecuadorians to crime
or forced others to flee the country.
La Regional prison, where
Macías was incarcerated before his latest escape, is one of five facilities
that make up a large prison complex in Guayaquil – a port city and popular
transit route for cocaine leaving the country that has seen some of the
bloodiest violence between rival gangs.
In a music video shared online
last year, the Los Choneros leader can be seen petting a rooster, apparently
inside Guayaquil prison complex.
The drug ballad, sung by
Mariachi Bravo, also features Macías’ daughter Michelle. CNN has reached out to
SNAI to ask how Mariachi Bravo was able to film the notorious inmate.
Allegations of corruption have
swirled around Macías’ luxurious living situation in prison, especially over
why he was able to stay in a medium security prison instead of a maximum
security penitentiary.
Announcing US sanctions on Los
Choneros and Macías this month, the US Treasury Department said the gang leader
“enjoyed access to cell phones and internet, which enabled him to continue to
direct the activities of Los Choneros and publish external communications.”
A military source told CNN
that Macías enjoyed cockfighting while in prison, and that his room was
enlarged to be as big as two prison cells.
The drug kingpin was also able
to have a string of women visit him while he was incarcerated, the source said.
It was no secret that Macías was living in relative luxury compared to the average inmate.
He celebrated his
42nd birthday with great fanfare, according to CNN affiliate Ecuavisa, which
showed footage of a fireworks display at his prison and loud music emanating
from the compound.
An image of the event showed
the kingpin posing in front of what appears to be a birthday cake.
In December, the freshly
inaugurated Ecuadorian President Daniel Noboa joked during an interview with
state media that Macías’ cell had more power outlets “than a room at the
Marriott.”
Asked what his government’s
plan was to tackle the lawless prisons, Noboa replied: “There’s a pretty plan,
don’t tell Fito, don’t tell Fito yet.”
The government had planned to transfer
Macías to a high security prison. But Macías is believed to have been tipped
off in advance, prompting his escape in January.
Around the same time, his wife
and children traveled to the Argentine city of Córdoba, where they moved into a
recently purchased house, according to officials in Argentina.
“Our theory is that there was
previous planning to buy the house, get the family out [of Ecuador], and once
the family was out, escape from prison,” Argentina’s Security Minister Patricia
Bullrich has said. The family was expelled two weeks after their arrival, according
to Argentine officials.
It remains unclear how and
when Macías escaped. But the press secretary of Ecuador’s president reckons the
Los Choneros leader was told about an impending prison transfer.
“Yes, there was a leak, most
likely there was a leak,” Roberto Izurieta told Ecuadorian channel
Teleamazonas.
CNN has reached out to the
country’s prison agency, SNAI, for comment.
Ecuador exploded in violence
following news of Macías’ jailbreak and President Noboa declared a state of
emergency on January 8.
Police and prison staff were
taken hostage, explosions set off in several cities, a TV studio was raided by
gunmen, a prosecutor investigating gangs was murdered, and the alleged leader
of the rival Los Lobos gang, Fabricio Colón Pico, escaped prison with dozens of
other inmates.
Noboa also declared war on the
gangs, which he described as “narco-terrorist groups” who enjoy the support of
foreign cartels.
The ongoing crackdown, which
has seen the military deployed to help Ecuador’s overwhelmed police force, led
to more than 5,000 arrests.
But experts question if such
militarization will work as a long-term solution to criminal gangs when the
root causes of Ecuador’s violence – including systemic corruption, weak state
institutions and being wedged between some of the biggest cocaine producers in
the world – have not changed.
Today, soldiers ring the
exterior walls of the Guayaquil prison complex where Macías broke out from. As
part of the crackdown, Noboa has vowed to build even more prisons.
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